Nu-ILB: What books have you purchased lately?

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (2562 of them)

Jeter novel is 92; last one published before Noir. Loop album is 91. WF dust jacket had a palindrome from another book (with 'wolf' as first word, 'flow' as last); perhaps that's where the title came from...

skeevy wonder (Drugs A. Money), Sunday, 21 October 2012 15:08 (thirteen years ago)

Sold a bunch for pennies and a copy of Edmund White's essays (mostly bcz of an essay on Nabokov) and Pavese's Devil in the Hills.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 21 October 2012 15:28 (thirteen years ago)

The Greek Alexander Romance... Have you gotten to this one yet?

Not yet. It is lurking at the periphery of my To Read heap.

Aimless, Sunday, 21 October 2012 18:15 (thirteen years ago)

I should probably make a clean breast of this. Yesterday, for the grand sum of $2.50 I bought a two-volume hardcover boxed set of The Basic Writings of St. Thomas Acquinas, comprised of the Summa Theologica and the Summa Contra Gentiles. I am still not sure why, other than a mild curiosity.

Aimless, Sunday, 21 October 2012 18:45 (thirteen years ago)

The Bell - Iris Murdoch
The Egyptologists - Kingsley Amis & Robert Conequest
Song of the Silent Snow - Hubert Selby Jr
Corpse - Mick Farren
L.A. Noir Trilogy - James Ellroy
Citizen Kane (BFI Classics) - Laura Mulvey
Spring Snow - Yukio Mishima

Ward Fowler, Sunday, 21 October 2012 19:33 (thirteen years ago)

Film And Feelings by Raymond Durgnat
The Three Musketeers by Dumas - The Lowell Bair translation; I feel like that may mean something or nothing to Dumas afficionados.

45 DOWN: "NYPD Blue" actor ____ Morales (R Baez), Sunday, 21 October 2012 19:37 (thirteen years ago)

At a library sale, lovely NYRB edition of Belchamber by Howard Sturgis, which I'd never heard of but hey, it's NYRB.

franny glass, Monday, 22 October 2012 01:28 (thirteen years ago)

I'd put The Egyptologists fairly near the bottom of the pile, Ward.

Fizzles, Monday, 22 October 2012 08:05 (thirteen years ago)

I suspected as much, Fizzles, but I'd not actually seen a copy before. I shall file it on the completist-spasm pile.

Ward Fowler, Monday, 22 October 2012 08:23 (thirteen years ago)

Not a purchase, but recovered a small pile of books from storage+ am happy to be reunited with George Saintsbury's Minor Poets of the Caroline period in 3 vols, it is one of the few handsome books I own.

woof, Monday, 22 October 2012 09:24 (thirteen years ago)

Never read 'The Egyptologists'--my copy has this awful cover:
[http://pictures.abebooks.com/GDP/6774829488.jpg

This cover is at least a bit better. http://www.bondibooks.com/ILAB/2009/6/523.jpg

ornamental cabbage (James Morrison), Monday, 22 October 2012 23:21 (thirteen years ago)

I rather like Panther's unfailing commitment to tackily inappropriate cover imagery.
My copy is a 1990s paperback with an unexceptional painted cover, part of a uniform series.

Ward Fowler, Monday, 22 October 2012 23:43 (thirteen years ago)

Sanatorium under the Sign of the Hourglass - Bruno Schulz
Always Coming Home - Ursula K Le Guin (based on raves from ILX, this better be good)
To the Finland Station - Edmund Wilson

searching for sug woman (JoeStork), Monday, 22 October 2012 23:46 (thirteen years ago)

I rather like Panther's unfailing commitment to tackily inappropriate cover imagery.
My copy is a 1990s paperback with an unexceptional painted cover, part of a uniform series.

there was a whole series of these wasn't there? The Egyptologists gets the cover it deserves tbh, but The Green Man, Girl 20, and, to an extent I Want It Now, are considerably better books. I think there was another in fact - surely not The Riverside Villas Murder.

Fizzles, Tuesday, 23 October 2012 16:42 (thirteen years ago)

Ward let us know what you think of the Mishima. That should near the top of the pile.

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 23 October 2012 18:52 (thirteen years ago)

Spring Snow is OK. I just re-bought Acts of Worship b/c I'm always giving Mishima away when people come over. After the banquet to people I like and Forbidden Colours to people I don't

I also got Eugene Onegin which I've never read
Kristeva's Tales of love which I love and lost somewhere
Iris Murdoch's The black prince, Murdoch is new to me and I heard this was a good start

Turned down an expensive Blake collection, which was hardcover and beautifully printed but was $25 and I wasn't up for it

flamboyant goon tie included, Tuesday, 23 October 2012 20:35 (thirteen years ago)

All of Mishima's books have something for me, even the ones that don't add up to much. My personal favourite is Sun and Steel (an essay of his).

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 23 October 2012 20:44 (thirteen years ago)

There are SO MANY I haven't read, pretty much all the recently translated stuff. I need to catch up but I typically just re-read and re-read him

flamboyant goon tie included, Tuesday, 23 October 2012 20:48 (thirteen years ago)

Sorry, what recently translated stuff?

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 23 October 2012 21:14 (thirteen years ago)

a '66 paperback of The Diary of Vaslav Nijinsky
have tried to think where I was reading references to the book. Does Colin Wilson reference it somewere in the Outsider or something, or does it turn up in Morning of the Magicians or something of that ilk?
anyway cost €2 and binding looks pretty together.

and Theosophy by Rudolf Steiner. Hadn't realised he was connected to Blavatsky at all. Haven't read the book yet so don't know if he twisted the teachings at all. Thought he was supposed to be a philanthropist of sorts and not sure to what extent the Theosophy society was conventionally philanthropic. Thought it might actually be more mysanthropic to large sections of society, but been a while since i read much about them.

Stevolende, Friday, 26 October 2012 18:26 (thirteen years ago)

Sister Noon by Karen Joy Fowler, best known for The Jane Austen Book Club, which I haven't read. Have enjoyed Fowler's science fiction short stories, and most of her novel Sarah Canary, though it alternates frontier sightings of the diverting, anomalous title character with real solid chunks of historical commentary, tending to the lecture-y. This one is about a good daughter of old San Francisco, whose life is complicated by encounters with the historical entity previously known to me as Mammy Pleasant, though she had other names, other roles besides madam. Blurbs indcate she's a deftly flickering, flowering Fowlerian subject.

dow, Saturday, 27 October 2012 16:23 (thirteen years ago)

Just got this
http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1312050000l/1403416.jpg

dow, Monday, 29 October 2012 21:42 (thirteen years ago)

that is not a good cover

ornamental cabbage (James Morrison), Wednesday, 31 October 2012 23:01 (thirteen years ago)

Tons o' recent back issues of THE PARIS REVIEW, each a buck a piece. So those'll keep me occupied.

45 DOWN: "NYPD Blue" actor ____ Morales (R Baez), Wednesday, 31 October 2012 23:19 (thirteen years ago)

I trip on their online interview archive. Writers are soooo into being interviewed, getting away from the desk; for PR anyway. What's wrong with the cover, Ornamental Cabbage?

dow, Thursday, 1 November 2012 00:53 (thirteen years ago)

Every interview intro reads like "This interview is composed of eight sessions which took place over fifteen months..."

45 DOWN: "NYPD Blue" actor ____ Morales (R Baez), Thursday, 1 November 2012 01:08 (thirteen years ago)

It looks like a Harlequin erotic novel, but with extra horrible type on the blurb quotes, and the Series of Unfortunate Events font for the title/author. Very mixed messages//slapped together. Nice bum, though.

ornamental cabbage (James Morrison), Thursday, 1 November 2012 01:49 (thirteen years ago)

Two by Blaise Cendrars - Gold and The Astonished Man (love Peter Owen)
Pavese - The Leather Jacket
Denton Welch - I Left my Grandfather's House

xyzzzz__, Friday, 2 November 2012 09:49 (thirteen years ago)

The Street Of Crocodiles And Other Stories by Bruno Schulz - Penguin Classics edition! Feels/looks swank. Should arguably be named Sanatorium Under The Sign Of The Hourglass And Other Stories, but can't quibble.

45 DOWN: "NYPD Blue" actor ____ Morales (R Baez), Sunday, 4 November 2012 17:48 (thirteen years ago)

stopped in my two fave stores near me. grey matter and meeting house books. they are such great stores. seriously, i can't say it enough, grey matter is REALLY worth a trip if you are near boston or even new york. this is my last buying trip for a while. will not buy anything else for myself this year. i have so much stuff at home stacked up.

clifford d. simak - time & again

samuel r. delany - the ballad of beta 2

jack vance - to live forever

jack vance - emphyrio

robert silverberg - the masks of time

robert silverberg - tower of glass

rudy rucker - wetware

rudy rucker - master of space and time

james tiptree, jr - up the walls of the world

theodore sturgeon - to marry medusa

james timptree, jr - star songs of an old primate

thomas m. disch - on wings of song

thomas m. disch - echo round his bones

theodore sturgeon - the synthetic man

kate wilhelm - city of cain

kate wilhelm - the killer thing

kate wilhelm - the clewiston test

patricia highsmith - plotting and writing suspense fiction

reinhold millers - time exile

kim stanley robinson - the wild shore (book one of three californias trilogy)

scott seward, Sunday, 4 November 2012 23:53 (thirteen years ago)

I just went to the actual place so I bought Pamuk's 'Museum of Innocence'.

The windiest militant trash (Michael White), Monday, 5 November 2012 17:10 (thirteen years ago)

Read The Clewiston Test recently: quite good, if low-key.

I could never get properly on board with Rudy Rucker. Read his Ware trilogy years ago. Lots of inventive ideas, but REALLY shoddy prose.

ornamental cabbage (James Morrison), Monday, 5 November 2012 22:28 (thirteen years ago)

Never had a prob w Rucker; so I have no taste, but/and really enjoyed The Wild Shore. Seemed caught up in the wide- and sharp-eyed urgency of Huckleberry Finn, which no writer should think about inviting comparisons to, but Robinson makes it work. Also kind of Twain x London, re Man in/vs. Nature.

dow, Saturday, 10 November 2012 00:19 (thirteen years ago)

The Line Of Beauty by Alan Hollinghurst
The Everlasting Story Of Nory by Nicholson Baker
Ten Thousand Things by Maria Dermout
My Ears Are Bent by Joseph Mitchell

45 DOWN: "NYPD Blue" actor ____ Morales (R Baez), Saturday, 10 November 2012 00:21 (thirteen years ago)

As a birthday gift:

My Vocabulary Did This To Me: The Collected Poetry of Jack Spicer. I've had my eye on this for almost half a year, but I am a cheapskate.

Aimless, Saturday, 10 November 2012 03:59 (thirteen years ago)

The Long Ships is a Kindle Daily Deal today, maybe will get that. Oh wait, do we post ebooks on this thread?

What Kind Of EOY POLL Do You Look Like Now? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 11 November 2012 18:32 (thirteen years ago)

An ebook meets the basic requirement of being a book.

Aimless, Sunday, 11 November 2012 19:54 (thirteen years ago)

Dow, you have taste! And you're spot-on about The Wild Shore. I really need to get and read the other two books in that sort-of-trilogy

ornamental cabbage (James Morrison), Sunday, 11 November 2012 21:36 (thirteen years ago)

GOt the Pete Townshend autobio last week, not looked far into it and still have a couple of books to finish before i start it.
I was half thinking of buying a William Kennedy omnibus in another shop but wound up not. Pages were a bit yellowed, been meaning to read some of him since the film of Ironweed came out. I know I did get through one of his at some time back then and meant to read more, probably was one of the titles in the omnibus, but this is now 20 or more years later.

Stevolende, Sunday, 11 November 2012 23:15 (thirteen years ago)

xpost Thanks Ornamental, yeah, I've got some kind of taste, whatever it is. Right now,I too need to read the other two, Gold Coast and Pacific Rim(both which I've got)in that sort-of trilogy, plus the more recent 40 Drops of Rain (also got) and its two similarly titled follow-ups--and his new 3032 (think that's the title). In other words, I have a taste for following this theme of man screwing with Nature (thus himself as well). So just got Jon Krauker's non-fiction Into Thin Air, about a disastrously vainglorious Everest expedition. Krakauer was one of the climbers, less gullible than some, but how much less, if he was there at all? He prob asks himself that too; not one of your more pompous reporters. Really liked his unpretentious speculations and humane journo-surgical skill re the elusive, somewhat Thoreau-wannabbe tracked in Into The Wild (also a really fine movie, directed by Sean Penn).

dow, Sunday, 11 November 2012 23:35 (thirteen years ago)

Jon Krakauer, that is! Also will read his book on the Pat Tillman case, with the rugged terrain as actual factor and alibi (though several layers of the cover-up were constructed in the Pentagon)

dow, Sunday, 11 November 2012 23:41 (thirteen years ago)

A doctor appointment took me within a few blocks of Powell's Books. This can be fatal.

The Elder Edda, tr. Andy Orchard, a new Penguin classic paperback, $15.
A, Louis Zukofsky, New Directions trade paperback, new, $25.
Rome and Italy, Livy, used Penguin classic paperback, $7.

Aimless, Monday, 12 November 2012 22:17 (thirteen years ago)

I've got that Krakauer short book 'Three Cups of Deceit' which I keep meaning to read

ornamental cabbage (James Morrison), Monday, 12 November 2012 22:37 (thirteen years ago)

The Elder Edda, tr. Andy Orchard, a new Penguin classic paperback, $15.

weird thing for them to bring out! apparently it's been delayed for like ten years. what's it like - ? have you read the one in OUP at all?

Yorkshire lass born and bred, that's me, said Katriona's hologram. (thomp), Monday, 12 November 2012 22:59 (thirteen years ago)

I have not read the OUP edition of the Elder Edda. What's it like?

Aimless, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 00:17 (thirteen years ago)

Oh, I see you asked first. The Orchard translation appears to be a fairly freehand poetic interpretation. Here's a sample taken at random (p110):

13. 'Tell me this, All-wise, since, dwarf, I suspect
you know every creature's whole history:
what the moon is called that people see
in every world there is.'

14. ' "Moon" it's called by men, but "gloe-ball" by the gods,
they call it "spinning wheel" in Hel;
"speeder" giants, "shining" dwarfs,
the leves call it "tally of years".'

Aimless, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 00:24 (thirteen years ago)

damn typos:
line 5 glow-ball,
line 8 elves

Aimless, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 00:46 (thirteen years ago)

that seems a little more naturalistic than i remember the er larrington being, which is the one that's in world's classics -- i recall it having a sort of half-translated feel, lots of nouns and syntax kept, which kind of suited the material somehow still. i don't know, i don't remember it particularly well -- i just remember riddling-matches and the sorts of details everyone remembers (ship made of dead men's fingernails e.g.) and never really understanding the time-frame of the voluspa

Yorkshire lass born and bred, that's me, said Katriona's hologram. (thomp), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 00:52 (thirteen years ago)

The Dog Of The South by Charles Portis
Dream Time by Geoffrey O'Brien

The Portis, after I finish this Hollinghurst, is coming next next next.

45 DOWN: "NYPD Blue" actor ____ Morales (R Baez), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 23:58 (thirteen years ago)

t Aimless: you're in for a treat w/ the Spicer -- I picked it up a few months ago & still feel like i've barely scratched the surface of its myriad delights

six possible reasons why Obama won. Some are truly chilling. (bernard snowy), Thursday, 15 November 2012 02:15 (thirteen years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.